Little is known about how depression and appearance anxiety affect patient reporting of synkinesis severity. Measure prevalence of depression and appearance anxiety in facial synkinesis and correlations between subjective and surgeon-graded synkinesis severity. Prospective cohort. Patients with synkinesis volunteered and completed: Synkinesis Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ), facial clinimetric evaluation (FaCE) scale, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), and Fear of Negative Appearance Evaluation Scale (FNAES). Standardized videos were scored by facial plastic surgeons using Sunnybrook Scale and eFaCE. Multivariate linear regression was used to compare patient- and surgeon-graded metrics. One hundred patients participated, 91 were female. Mean age was 56.4 (12.3). Eight percent identified as Black and 87% White. The most common nerve injury etiology was idiopathic (47%). Mean synkinesis duration was 7.6 years (6.2). Twenty percent and 15% reported history of an anxiety or depressive disorder, respectively. Patient (SAQ, FaCE) and clinician (Sunnybrook, eFaCE) scores were correlated (Pearson's 0.223-0.294,  < 0.05). Upon adjusting for CES-D/FNAES, correlations between most patient and clinician metrics became stronger. As CES-D and FNAES worsened, patient-clinician correlations weakened. Depression and appearance anxiety may affect patient reporting of synkinesis severity. Worse mental health scores may decorrelate patient and clinician synkinesis assessments.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/fpsam.2023.0291DOI Listing

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